Cancer needs
a different conversation.
Stone disease and BPH are condition-management problems. Cancer is different. The decisions have higher stakes, the staging matters more, and the treatment is often multi-disciplinary — combining surgery with chemotherapy, radiation, or hormonal therapy depending on the stage.
Our role in urological cancer is twofold. First — perform the surgery that needs surgical expertise. Radical or partial nephrectomy for kidney cancer, radical prostatectomy or pelvic dissection for prostate cancer, radical cystectomy with urinary diversion for bladder cancer, orchidectomy for testicular cancer. Second — coordinate the broader cancer care. Refer to medical oncology for chemotherapy, radiation oncology for radiotherapy, and uro-pathology for tissue analysis.
Most importantly: no cancer treatment decision is rushed. We give you the time, the second opinions, the staging clarity, and the cost transparency you need to choose the right path.
One specialty.
Six different cancers.
Kidney Cancer (RCC)
Renal cell carcinoma is often discovered incidentally on ultrasound or CT. Most localised RCC is curable with partial or radical nephrectomy. Learn more →
Prostate Cancer
Second-most-common cancer in men globally. Caught early on PSA screening, often curable. Treatment ranges from active surveillance to radical surgery. Learn more →
Bladder Cancer
Usually presents with painless blood in urine. Requires ongoing surveillance — even after treatment. TURBT, intravesical therapy, cystectomy. Learn more →
Testicular Cancer
The most curable cancer when caught early — even with metastasis, cure rates exceed 95%. Self-examination matters. Treatment combines surgery and chemotherapy Learn more → .
Adrenal Tumours
Adrenal masses are often found incidentally on CT. Many are benign; some are hormonally active. Laparoscopic adrenalectomy is the standard approach for surgical lesions. Learn more →
Penile Cancer
Uncommon but serious. Linked to phimosis and HPV. Treatment depends on stage — local excision, partial penectomy, or wider surgery with lymph node assessment. Learn more →
Four facts that matter
in cancer care.
Fellowship in laparoscopic urology
VLD Fellowship in Advanced Endourology and Laparoscopy. Many uro-oncological procedures can be done laparoscopically — faster recovery, smaller cuts.
Tertiary hospital experience
Trained at Apollo Chennai and Fortis Gurugram — high-volume cancer centres. Brings that experience to private practice in Jaipur.
Multi-disciplinary coordination
We coordinate with medical and radiation oncology partners. You get all relevant specialists involved — not just a surgical opinion.
Second opinion welcome
Bring outside reports for a structured second opinion. No pressure to operate. Sometimes the answer is: continue your current plan.
From diagnosis
to follow-up.
Diagnosis & staging
Review of existing reports. Additional imaging or biopsy if needed.
Treatment plan
Surgical options. Multi-disciplinary discussion if relevant. Cost in writing.
Optimisation
Anaesthesia review. Medical optimisation of any co-morbidities.
The procedure
Open, laparoscopic, or endoscopic depending on cancer and stage.
Lifelong
Surveillance imaging, PSA monitoring, or other tests as needed.
Uro-oncology —
your questions.
Most urological cancers are not emergencies — there is time for second opinions, staging, and considered planning. Acute exceptions: massive bleeding, complete obstruction, or rapid progression.
Depends on cancer type and stage. Many localised cancers are cured by surgery alone. Advanced cancers may need combined treatment with medical or radiation oncology.
Many can. Kidney cancer (laparoscopic partial or radical nephrectomy), adrenal tumours (laparoscopic adrenalectomy), and some prostate cancers (robotic-assisted radical prostatectomy at partner centres). Bladder cancer surgery and large complex cases may need open approach.
Multi-disciplinary planning. Surgery may still play a role (palliative or symptom control), combined with systemic therapy. Each case is individualised.
Yes — all major Indian health insurers cover urological cancer surgery, and most cover follow-up imaging. We handle cashless pre-authorisation.
Yes — second opinions are welcomed. Bring all reports, biopsies, imaging discs. We give an honest assessment without pressure to switch care.